thews wrote:Ok. Can you answer the following questions then?
2. There is no archaeological evidence of the Book of Mormon, a fact that seriously undermines its authenticity claims.
Please point out one single piece of tangible evidence that supports the historicity of the Book of Mormon.
"Can you ... then?" I've always found that an interesting English construct. It seems like what you're saying is, "KevinSim disagrees with #2, #3, and #4,
and therefore should be able to point out at least "one single piece of tangible evidence that supports the historicity of the Book of Mormon." Is that what you're saying, Thews?
For the record I know of
absolutely no tangible evidence that supports the historicity of the Book of Mormon. So what? I don't see how my ignorance "undermines its authenticity claims" at all.
I also know of
absolutely no tangible evidence that a good deity has been active in the history of the human race. Should I therefore stop believing in God? One does not have to have tangible evidence for the historicity of something to have good reasons for believing in that something.
thews wrote: 3. The Book of Mormon is filled with anachronisms that also damage credibility as a Divine record.
So many to choose from. I'll let someone else handle this one if they want. Which one listed in this Wiki entry do you disagree with most?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anachronis ... achronisms
So, Thews, are you saying that when God puts together a book of scripture, we can be certain that He won't let His scribes put an abundance of anachronisms in it? If so, how can we be certain of that? Why would God care?
The list is long, and I don't have enough knowledge to deal with every single item in the list. But I think it's completely possible that "traditional biblical belief" could be right about when Isaiah was written, and modern scholars could be wrong.
Baptism "as a ritual as described in the Book of Mormon ... is widely believed to be unknown until its institution in early Christianity." So what? The history of mankind is
full of widely held beliefs that later turned out to be wrong. Are you saying that God didn't know His prophet John would baptize before He created the world? Perhaps God didn't care how people were cleansed from their sins, and just assumed John would come up with something? I think it's much more likely that God knew from the beginning the means He wanted His prophets to use to symbolically cleanse people, and revealed that means to the Book of Mormon prophets.
The Book of Mormon says there were horses in America, but if you take a close look at the Book of Mormon story as a whole it doesn't indicate that there were ever large numbers of them. Several Book of Mormon accounts would have turned out differently if Nephites and/or Lamanites had large numbers of horses at their disposal. My impression is that there were only small numbers of them, possibly just kept by the rulers, and they may have died out. Also, someone who wasn't LDS at one point told me that there's no more evidence of the existence of bison in America than there is of horses. Some animals just don't leave an awful lot of evidence that they were there.
thews wrote:4. DNA evidence shows that Native Americans do not come from Middle Eastern heritage. Recently, the Church changed its claim that "the Lamanites are the principal ancestors of the American Indians" to the Lamanites "are among the ancestors of the American Indians".
This one isn't my area either, so I'll let someone else take it if they want to. What part of the enclosed link do you disagree with?
http://20truths.information/Mormon/dna.html
"Natives of North and South America (and Pacific Islanders) have genetic alleles that can be traced exclusively to Asia. Mitochondrial DNA is transmitted unilineally, and is therefore not watered down by intermarriage--even the mitochondria of a single remote ancestor of a group would likely show up at least occasionally in tests." I think this data is out of date. If the television program NOVA is scientifically accurate, then researchers have made discoveries since the ones mentioned in this website that have changed the conclusions considerably. The statements on this website implying that the DNA shows the Native Americans "can be traced exclusively to Asia" are dated, I think, 2000 and 2002, or something like that. In 2008 I watched a NOVA program with my father that said that yes, much of the DNA of the Native Americans can be traced to Asia, but there was also a significant amount of DNA that
didn't come from Asia, that came from an unknown source. The researchers
simply didn't know where that DNA came from. Let me point out too, that while the DNA of Jews might be easily recognizable, I'm not convinced that the DNA of the descendants of Manasseh is. The NOVA researchers certainly did
not say that they were certain the unknown DNA did not come from the descendants of Manasseh.
thews wrote:Out of curiosity Kevin, can you tell me exactly what the Urim and Thummim is?
No, I can't. All I know about the Urim and Thummim comes from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urim_and_Thummim", and I have no idea how accurate that website is.